Remarks by the President at Bush-Cheney 2004 Luncheon
Sheraton Birmingham Hotel
Birmingham, Alabama

12:00 P.M. CST

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you all very much. Thanks for coming. I
told Shelby I wanted a short introduction. (Laughter.) He
delivered. (Laughter.) Thanks for coming. I'm thrilled to be back
in the great state of Alabama. I do have a lot of friends here, and I
appreciate your friendship, and I appreciate your support. What
we're doing here is laying the foundation for what is going to be a
great national victory in 2004. (Applause.)

And I'm getting ready for it. (Laughter.) I'm loosening up.
(Laughter.) But I want you to know that politics will come in its own
time. As my strong supporters, you've got to know that I know I've got
a job to do. And so when you start laying the grassroots organization,
and you go to your coffee shops and your houses of worship and your
farm implementation dealership, you tell them the President is doing
the job. He's doing the job for every single American. I will keep
America strong and secure and prosperous and free. (Applause.)

My regret is that Laura didn't come. A lot people are -- yes, I'm
sure it is. (Laughter.) She said, mine, too. (Laughter.) She
understands you drew the short straw. (Laughter.) For the people in
Mobile who are here, thank you for coming up. But you drew the long
straw, and Laura had a fabulous visit down to Mobile, Alabama. But she
sends her best. I've got to tell you, I'm really proud of her. She is
a fabulous wife, a great mother, and a wonderful First Lady.
(Applause.)

I want to thank Richard and Annette for their friendship. Shelby
is a good man, and he told me, he said, I'm going to make sure this
fundraiser is successful -- (applause.) I know here we're talking
about our election campaign, but it's very important you send Senator
Shelby back to the United States Senate. (Applause.) And I also like
the other senator a lot, Senator Jeff Sessions. He's doing a fabulous
job for Alabama. (Applause.)

I'm proud to be here with my friend, the Governor of Alabama, Bob
Riley. I appreciate Governor Riley coming. (Applause.) I'm also
honored to be with many members of the Alabama Congressional
delegation: Jo Bonner, and Terry Everett, and Mike Rogers, and Robert
Aderholt, and Spencer Bachus. I want to thank all of them for coming.
(Applause.)

And I want you all to know who came up here with Robert's mother,
that I know where Winston County, Alabama is -- (laughter) -- mobile
homes and Republicans. (Laughter.)

I appreciate so very much Attorney General Bill Pryor. (Applause.)
I want to thank my friend, Mercer Reynolds, from Cincinnati, Ohio, who
is the national finance chairman for Bush-Cheney. He's an
entrepreneur, like many of you all are. He is taking time out of his
life to help us gather the resources necessary to run a vibrant
campaign, and I appreciate his help. And I want to thank Mike
Thompson. Mike is our state finance chairman here in Alabama, and
obviously, he has done, along with many others, a fabulous job of
organizing this fundraiser. (Applause.)

I want to thank Marty Connors and Edgar Elden and Bettye Fine
Collins, all of whom are very much involved in grassroots politics here
in Alabama. I'm going to be counting on you. I'm going to be counting
on you to put up the signs, and to send out the letters, and counting
on you to get this grassroots organization alive and well here. We
can't win this without your help.

I want to thank you for -- all of you who are involved in
grassroots politics. I want to thank the local officials and the state
officials who are here. I want to thank the mayors who are here.

I had the honor of meeting Johnny Spann, whose son, Mike, was one
of the first casualties in the war on terror in Afghanistan. Our
prayers are with the Spann family. I want to thank Johnny for his
spirit and his strength, and I want to thank Mike for giving his life
for a cause greater than himself. (Applause.)

And, finally, I want to thank Dr. Charles Durham, the pastor of the
First Presbyterian Church of Tuscaloosa. I'm not surprised that Shelby
made sure that the pastor here was from Tuscaloosa. (Laughter.)

Most of all, I want to thank you all for coming. In the last
two-and-a-half years, our nation has acted decisively to confront great
challenges. I came to this office to solve problems, instead of
passing them on to future presidents and future generations.
(Applause.) I came to seize opportunities instead of letting them slip
away. My administration is meeting the tests of our time. (Applause.)

Terrorists declared war on the United States of America, and war
is what they got. We've captured or kill many of the key leaders of
the al Qaeda network, and the rest of them know we're on their trail.
In Afghanistan and in Iraq, we gave ultimatums to terror regimes.
Those regimes chose defiance, and those regimes are no more.
(Applause.) Fifty million people in those two countries once lived
under tyranny, and today they live in freedom. (Applause.)

Two-and-a-half years ago, our military was not receiving the
resources it needed, and morale was beginning to suffer. So we
increased the defense budgets to prepare for the threats of a new era,
and today, no one in the world can question the skill and the strength
and the spirit of the United States military. (Applause.)

Two-and-a-half years ago, we inherited an economy in recession.
And then our country was attacked. And we had scandals in corporate
America. And we marched to war. All of which affected the people's
confidence. But we acted. We passed tough new laws to hold corporate
criminals to account. And to get the economy going again, I have twice
led the United States Congress to pass historic tax relief for the
American people. (Applause.)

We know that when Americans have more take-home pay to spend, to
save or invest, the whole economy grows and people are more likely to
find a job. So we're passing money back to the people to help them
raise their families. We're reducing taxes on dividends and capital
gains to encourage investment. We're giving small businesses
incentives to expand and to hire new people. With all these actions,
we're laying the foundation for greater economic prosperity and jobs
across America so every single person in this country can realize the
American Dream. (Applause.)

Two-and-a-half years ago there was a lot of talk about education
reform, but there wasn't much action. So I called for, and the
Congress passed, the No Child Left Behind Act. With a solid bipartisan
majority, we delivered the most dramatic education reforms in a
generation. We insist upon high standards and accountability in every
public school in America because we believe every child can learn. We
are challenging the soft bigotry of low expectations. (Applause.) In
return for increased federal money, we expect results. We want to see
results. The days of excuse-making are over. We expect results
because we don't want one, single child in America left behind.
(Applause.)

We've reorganized our government and created the Department of
Homeland Security to better safeguard our borders and ports, and to
better protect the American people.

We passed trade promotion authority to open new markets for
Alabama's farmers and entrepreneurs and manufacturers. We passed
budget agreements to help maintain a much needed spending discipline in
Washington, D.C. On issue after issue, this administration has acted
on principle, has kept its word and has made progress for the American
people. (Applause.)

And the Congress has shared in these great achievements. I've got
a great relationship with Denny Hastert, the Speaker of the House, and
Bill Frist, the Majority Leader, as I do with the Alabama senators and
congressional delegation. They deserve a lot of credit. We're working
hard to change the tone in Washington. And the truth of the matter is,
there's just too much needless politics up there. We're focusing on
the people's business, focusing on results.

And those are the kind of people I've attracted to my
administration. I've put together a superb team on behalf of the
American people, starting with a Birmingham soul, Condi Rice, who is
doing a fabulous job. (Applause.) Our country has had no finer Vice
President than Dick Cheney. (Applause.) Mother may have a different
opinion. (Laughter.)

We've done a lot in two-and-a-half years. We've come far. But
our work is only beginning. I have set great goals, worthy of a great
nation. First, America is committed to expanding the realm of freedom
and peace for our own security and for the benefit of the world. And,
second, in our own country, we must work for a society of prosperity
and compassion, so that every citizen has a chance to work and succeed
and to realize the great promise -- the great promise -- of America.

It is clear that the future of freedom and peace depend on the
actions of America. This nation is freedom's home and freedom's
defender. We welcome this charge of history and we are keeping it.
(Applause.)

Our war on terror continues. And the enemies of freedom are not
idle, and neither are we. This country will not rest, we will not
tire, we will not stop until this danger to civilization is removed.
(Applause.) We are confronting that danger in Iraq, where Saddam
holdouts and foreign terrorists are desperately trying to throw Iraq
into chaos by attacking our forces and aid workers and innocent Iraqi
citizens. They know that the advance of freedom in Iraq will be a
major defeat for the cause of terror. This collection of killers is
trying to shake the will of America. We will not be intimidated.
(Applause.)

We are aggressively striking the terrorists in Iraq, defeating them
there so we will not have to face them in our own country. We're
calling other nations to help Iraq to build a free country, which will
make us all more secure. We're standing with the Iraqi people as they
assume more of their own defense and move toward self-government.
These are not easy tasks, but they're essential tasks for the security
of the United States and for the peace of the world. We will finish
what we have begun and we will win this essential victory in the war on
terror. (Applause.)

Our greatest security comes from the advance of human liberty,
because free nations do not support terror; free nations do not attack
their neighbors; free nations do not develop weapons of mass terror.
Americans believe that freedom is the deepest need and hope of every
human heart. And I believe that freedom is the right of every person.
And I believe that freedom is the future of every nation. (Applause.)

America also understands that unprecedented influence brings
tremendous responsibilities. We have duties in this world, and when we
see disease and starvation and hopeless poverty we will not turn away.
On the continent of Africa, America is now committed to bringing the
healing power, the healing power of medicine to millions of men and
women and children now suffering with AIDS. This great land is leading
the world in this incredibly important work of human rescue.

We face challenges here at home, as well, and our actions will
prove that we're equal to those challenges. I just spent some time at
CraneWorks, a successful small business here in Alabama. I went there
to deliver this message as clearly as I could: so long as anybody in
our country is looking for work and can't find a job, I know we have a
problem; my job as the President is to continue to create an
environment for small businesses to grow to be big businesses, an
environment that rewards the entrepreneurial spirit. (Applause.)

We have a duty to keep our commitments to America's seniors by
strengthening and modernizing Medicare. The Congress has taken
historic action. The House acted and the Senate acted to improve the
lives of older Americans, for the first time since the creation of
Medicare, the Congress is passing reforms to increase choices for our
seniors, and to provide coverage for prescription drugs. Those two
bodies need to iron out their differences and to modernize the Medicare
system. We owe it to our seniors, and we owe it to those of us who are
going to be seniors to have a modern Medicare system. (Applause.)

For the sake of our health care system, we need to cut down on the
frivolous lawsuits which increase the cost of medicine. (Applause.)
People who have been harmed by a bad doc deserve their day in court.
Yet the system should not reward lawyers who are simply fishing for a
rich settlement. (Applause.) Frivolous lawsuits drive up the cost of
health care and they, therefore, affect the federal budget.

Medical liability reform is a national issue which requires a
national solution. The House of Representatives passed a good bill.
It is stuck in the United States Senate. Senators must realize that no
one has ever been healed by a frivolous lawsuit. (Applause.)

I have a responsibility as the President to make sure the judicial
system runs well. And I have met that duty. I have nominated superb
men and women to the federal courts, people who will interpret the law,
not legislate from the bench. (Applause.) I have nominated really
good, honest people like Bill Pryor. (Applause.) Bill Pryor will make
a fantastic judge on the court of appeals. (Applause.) Because of a
small group of senators who are willfully obstructing the process, some
of my nominees, like Bill, have had to wait months, in some cases, even
years, for an up-or-down vote. But, needless to say, delays in the
system are harming the administration of justice. They are deeply
unfair to the nominees, themselves. It is time for some members of the
United States Senate to stop playing politics with American justice.
(Applause.)

The Congress needs to complete work on a comprehensive energy
plan. Our nation must promote energy efficiency. We must work to
increase conservation. We must develop cleaner technology to explore
for supplies of energy at home in environmentally friendly ways. But
for the sake of our economic security, and for the sake of our national
security, we must become less dependent on foreign sources of energy.
(Applause.)

Our strong and prosperous nation must also be a compassionate
nation. I will continue to advance our agenda of compassionate
conservatism, which means we'll apply the most innovative and effective
ideas to the task of helping our fellow citizens in need. There are
still millions of men and women who want to end their dependence on
government and become independent through hard work. We must build on
the success of welfare reform to bring work and dignity into the lives
of more of our citizens.

Congress should complete the citizen service act so that more
Americans can serve their communities and their country. Both Houses
should reach agreement on my faith-based initiative to support the
armies of compassion that are mentoring children, and caring for the
homeless, and offering hope to the addicted. This nation of ours --
(applause). Government should welcome the great work that comes out of
our Christian houses, and Jewish temples, and Muslim institutions. We
must not fear faith in our society. We must welcome faith, and welcome
the armies of compassion who are healing hearts and helping change
American one soul at a time. (Applause.)

A compassionate society must provide -- promote opportunity for
all, and that includes the independence and dignity that come from
ownership. This administration will constantly promote an ownership
society in America. We want more people owning their home. We've got
home ownership -- a minority home ownership gap in America. I've
submitted a plan to Congress to close that gap.

We want more people owning their own health care plans and managing
their own health care plans. We want people to manage and own their
own retirement accounts. We want more people owning their own small
business. We understand that when a person owns something, he or she
has a vital stake in the future of America. (Applause.)

In a compassionate society, people respect one another, respect
their points of view. And they take responsibility for the decisions
they make. The culture of America is changing from one that has said,
if it feels good, do it, and if you've got a problem, blame somebody
else, to a new culture in which each of us understands we are
responsible for the decisions we make in life. If you are fortunate
enough to be a mom or a dad, you're responsible for loving your child
with all your heart. (Applause.) If you are concerned about the
quality of the education in the community in which you live, you're
responsible for doing something about it. If you're a CEO in corporate
America, you're responsible for telling the truth to your shareholders
and your employees. (Applause.)

And in this new responsibility society, each of us is responsible
for loving our neighbor just like we would like to be loved ourselves.
We can see the culture of service and responsibility growing around
us. I started what's called the USA Freedom Corps. If you're
interested, you can go right on the computer and look it up. It's a
chance to encourage people to extend a compassionate hand to a neighbor
in need, and the response has been strong. America is a giving
country. The heart and soul of the American people is really the
strength of our country.

Policemen and fire fighters and people who wear our nation's
uniform are reminding us what it means to sacrifice for something
greater than yourself. Once again, the children of America believe in
heroes because they see them everyday.

In these challenging times, the world has seen the resolve and the
courage of America. And I have been privileged to see the compassion
and the character of the American people. All the tests of the last
two-and-a-half years have come to the right nation. We're a strong
country, and we use that strength to defend the peace. We're an
optimistic country, confident in ourselves and in ideals bigger than
ourselves. Abroad, we seek to lift whole nations by spreading
freedom. At home, we seek to lift up lives by spreading opportunity to
every corner of America.

This is the work that history has set before us. We welcome it.
And we know that for our country, the best days lie ahead.